Even before the first hints we had “turned a corner” with
Covid-19, pundits were pumping up the volume on calls to loosen the
lockdown and get more shops and businesses open again. But others in the
media pointed out we don't know what's actually around that corner yet.
The New Zealand Herald last Monday - the day cabinet first discussed the end of lockdown.
Photo: RNZ Mediawatch
As a digital age influencer, our head of state is not exactly a prolific producer of multimedia content.
Aside from her annual Christmas message, the Queen's only done five other broadcasts in more than 65 years on the throne.
But the Crown still pulls a crowd in a crisis.
The Queen giving a special address to the UK and the Commonwealth on Covid-19.
Photo: Facebook/The Royal Family
“Though self-isolating may at times be hard, many people. . . are
discovering that it presents an opportunity to slow down, pause and
reflect, in prayer or meditation,” said Her Majesty in the
broadcast to the Commonwealth carried simultaneously by the big media outlets here last Monday.
But for broadcasters on air for hours every day - rather than once in
a blue moon like the Queen - pausing and reflecting doesn’t seem to be
an option.
Later that day Cabinet was due to discuss for the first time when the lockdown might be lifted.
“Businesses are screaming for a signal we are returning to work
soon,” the AM Show host Duncan Garner told viewers and listeners just
half an hour before the Queen’s speech last Monday.
Co-host Mark Richardson actually talked over the start of the
broadcast by the Queen with his opinions about more stores opening up.
That morning, butchers, golf courses and foundries were among
industries in the news appealing for more leeway to get back to
business.
Fish and chip shops are closed under the Covid-19 alert level four lockdown.
Photo: RNZ / Nate McKinnon
Other media pundits were amplifying these ‘screams’ even before
officials gingerly spoke of “turning a corner” and the PM explicitly
ruled out an early end to the lockdown.
“I’m starting to feel desperate for businesses who have been told they’re not allowed to operate during this lockdown,” said
Heather du Plessis-Allan on Newstalk ZB.
“The rules are starting to look unfair. We’re now seeing ridiculous
examples of what’s deemed essential," she said, seizing on the
now-notorious
$759 dressing gown.
The same day Newshub pointed out Farmers offering 'essential' t-shirts online - in wintertime.
As ZB hosts so often do in their daily editorials, Heather du Plessis -Allan ended on a rhetorical question:
“If we are relatively relaxed with most things, then why are we not
relaxed with businesses who can do their jobs safely, and keep the
economy ticking over a little bit more?”
Newstalk ZB's Heather du Plessis-Allan argues the restrictions on some businesses are too harsh.
Photo: screenshot
The answer is obvious: to stop people moving around more in
neighbourhoods and spreading the virus - and to ensure those who aren’t
already set up to package and deliver goods safely don't start up
sub-optimal systems from scratch at a crucial time.
This week, the media highlighted genuine inconsistencies in food sales rules that needed to be fixed. MBIE admitted to
TVNZ on Tuesday the rules weren't clear and were being tweaked.
On Monday’s AM Show, they were asking the audience:
Should the Government allow stores like butchers and greengrocers to open, to take pressure off supermarkets?
It’s hardly surprising four out of five respondents wanted more outlets open for essentials.
The AM Show’s Duncan Garner and Mark Richardson declared this was an
idea whose time had come, but they were more worried about shortening
the queues at supermarkets rather than public health or the viability of
businesses.
“They feel like you’re going to the Western front”, said co-host Mark Richardson, confusing Pak N Save with Passchendaele.
“You’re running the gauntlet. I did it once out of boredom and I hated it. I felt exposed to people,” he said.
AM co-host Duncan Garner went on claim Covid-19 had peaked here after
a glance at a graph of the recent figures, he and his co-hosts
struggled to work out the difference between the mean and the median.
“None of us passed maths,” he laughed. It might have been funny if
they weren’t bantering about hundreds of New Zealanders with a
potentially deadly disease.
Soon after on
Magic Talk radio the same day listeners heard
ACT leader David Seynour tell morning host Peter Williams the PM should
end the lockdown early if public health wouldn’t be compromised: a
massive ‘if’ which neither of them really addressed.
Kiwiblog published a lengthy piece -
Should lockdown end early?
- that said suspending businesses will cost lives and increase
suicides. But it was anonymous, with no indication of the expertise of
the author.
Others happy to attach their name to their reckons in the media insisted it was safe to re-open more business.
“You would, as amateurs in this whole business, be excused for
thinking there seems little reason why all of a sudden now, out of
nowhere, the numbers would suddenly spike,” Newstalk ZB’s Mike Hosking
said on Tuesday.
The curve doesn't necessarily stay flat. In South Korea there's been an
increase in new cases because the virus is still out there.
Coming out of lockdown would require “courage, guess work, luck, and potentially even a bit of magic,” Mike Hosking reckoned.
Fortunately it’s not 'amateurs' making the post-lockdown plans.
Later that day, director of health Ashley Bloomfield first spoke of
“turning a corner” and the PM said the same the next day. But knowing
what’s actually around the corner is another issue.
News you can use
The Herald's investigative reporter David Fisher digs deep on the data.
Photo: RNZ Mediawatch
Fortunately, news-you-can-use on this is not hard to find.
In an
enlightening comparison
of the speed and scope of New Zealand’s response with those of other
countries, Stuff correspondent Charlie Mitchell pointed out Estonia
declared a state of emergency a few days ahead of New Zealand and had
tested at a similar rate.
Its curve initially showed signs of flattening but has since returned to its previous rate of growth.
“Its lockdown was not quite as strict and allowed some shops to
remain open. It has since expanded its restrictions,” he wrote.
Also on Stuff, leading public health experts Michael Baker and Nick Wilson
explained other countries with looser suppression strategies have regretted it and had to progressively tighten up restrictions later.
The New Zealand Herald’s David Fisher
lifted the lid the same day on “missing and inconsistent data” hampering good decision-making. On RNZ’s
Nine to Noon economist
Brad Olsen said the the probable ‘life span’ of the virus makes the Covid-19 different to every previous economic disruption.
Marc Daalder at Newsroom.co.nz has produced in-depth analysis of the options -- and also
a comprehensive critique
of what he called a “bad faith backlash founded on old numbers, bunk
science and outright distortions" put forward by proponents of a looser
lockdown.
Comments
Post a Comment